All photos shown in this web site are property of the Authors

Thursday, January 27, 2011

Manchester United




Domestic League

    * First Division[(until 1992) and Premier League: 19
          o 1907–08, 1910–11, 1951–52, 1955–56, 1956–57, 1964–65, 1966–67, 1992–93, 1993–94, 1995–96, 1996–97, 1998–99, 1999–2000, 2000–01, 2002–03, 2006–07, 2007–08, 2008–09,2010-11
    * Second Division: 2
          o 1935–36, 1974–75

Cups

    * FA Cup: 11
          o 1908–09, 1947–48, 1962–63, 1976–77, 1982–83, 1984–85, 1989–90, 1993–94, 1995–96, 1998–99, 2003–04
    * League Cup: 4
          o 1991–92, 2005–06, 2008–09, 2009–10
    * FA Charity/Community Shield: 18 (14 outright, 4 shared)
          o 1908, 1911, 1952, 1956, 1957, 1965*, 1967*, 1977*, 1983, 1990*, 1993, 1994, 1996, 1997, 2003, 2007, 2008, 2010 (* shared)

European

    * European Cup/UEFA Champions League: 3
          o 1967–68, 1998–99, 2007–08
    * UEFA Cup Winners' Cup: 1
          o 1990–91
    * UEFA Super Cup: 1
          o 1991

Worldwide

    * Intercontinental Cup: 1
          o 1999
    * FIFA Club World Cup: 1
          o 2008

Appearances

    * Youngest first-team player: David Gaskell – 16 years, 19 days (against Manchester City, Charity Shield, 24 October 1956)
    * Oldest first-team player: Billy Meredith – 46 years, 281 days (against Derby County, First Division, 7 May 1921)
    * Oldest post-Second World War player: Edwin van der Sar – 40 years, 88 days (against Birmingham City, Premier League, 25 January 2011)
    * Most consecutive League appearances: 206 – Steve Coppell, 15 January 1977 – 7 November 1981[9]
    * Shortest appearance: 80 seconds – Nick Culkin v Arsenal, Premier League, 22 August 1999


Most appearances

Competitive, professional matches only.

↓     Name                                Years             League  FA Cup  League Cup Europe     Other    Total

1     Wales Ryan Giggs         1991–present    638(101)   70(10)    38 (6)    145 (20)  18 (3)    909(140)*
2     England Bobby Charlton 1956–1973     606 (2)     79 (0)     24 (0)       45 (0)       5 (0)    759  (2)
3     England Bill Foulkes     1952–1970       566 (3)     61 (0)     3 (0)         52 (0)       6 (0)    688 (3)
4     England Paul Scholes    1994–present   483 (87)   46 (15)   21 (7)     132 (20)   15 (1)    697(129)*
5     England Gary Neville    1992–2011    400 (21)   47 (3)     25 (2)     117 (8)     13 (2)    602 (36)
6     England Alex Stepney   1966–1978      433 (0)     44 (0)     35 (0)        23 (0)      4  (0)    539 (0)
7     Ireland Tony Dunne       1960–1973      414 (0)     55 (1)     21 (0)        40 (0)      5  (0)    535(1)
8     Ireland Denis Irwin        1990–2002     368 (12)    43 (1)     31 (3)        75 (2)    12 (0)     529(18)
9     England Joe Spence     1919–1933       481 (0)     29 (0)     0 (0)           0 (0)       0 (0)     510 (0)
10   Scotland Arthur Albiston 1974–1988    379 (15)    36 (0)    40 (2)        27 (1)      3 (0)     485  (18)

Goalscorers
A photograph of two men playing football. The man on the left, who is wearing a red shirt, white shorts and black socks, is shielding the ball from the man on the right, who is wearing a white shirt, navy blue shorts and white socks with navy blue trim.
Ruud van Nistelrooy (left) is Manchester United's ninth highest all-time goalscorer.

    * Most goals in a season in all competitions: 46 – Denis Law, 1963–64
    * Most League goals in a season: 32 – Dennis Viollet, Division 1, 1959–60
    * Most League goals in a 38-game season: 31 – Cristiano Ronaldo, Premier League, 2007–08]
    * Top League scorer with fewest goals in a season: 6
          o Bobby Charlton, 1972–73
          o Sammy McIlroy, 1973–74
    * Most goals scored in a match: 6
          o Harold Halse v Swindon Town, 25 September 1911
          o George Best v Northampton Town, 7 February 1970
    * Goals in consecutive league matches: 10 consecutive matches – Ruud van Nistelrooy, 22 March 2003 to 23 August 2003
    * Fastest goal: 15 seconds – Ryan Giggs v Southampton, Premier League, 18 November 1995
    * Fastest hat-trick: 4 minutes – Ernie Goldthorpe v Notts County, Second Division, 10 February 1923
    * Fastest four goals: 13 minutes – Ole Gunnar Solskjær v Nottingham Forest, Premier League, 6 February 1999
    * Most hat-tricks: 18 – Denis Law (3 November 1962 – 17 April 1971)

Overall scorers

    Competitive, professional matches only

↓     Name                      Years          League      FA Cup     League Cup  Europe     Other   Total

1 England Bobby Charlton  1956–1973    199 (606)     19 (79)    7 (24)    22 (45)    2 (5)     249(759)
2 Scotland Denis Law        1962–1973     171 (309)     34 (46)    3 (11)    28 (33)    1 (5)     237  (404)
3 England Jack Rowley      1937–1955     182 (380)     26 (42)    0 (0)        0 (0)      3 (2)     211  (424)
4 England Wayne Rooney  2004-present  129(251)     14(26)     4(11)      30(70)    4(7)       181(365)*
4 England Dennis Viollet   1952–1962     159 (259)     5 0(18)    1 (2)     13 (12)    1 (2)     179  (293)
4 N. Ireland George Best  1963–1974    137 (361)     21 0(46)   9 (25)   11 (34)    1 (4)     179(470)
6 England Joe Spence         1919–1933     158 (481)     10 (29)    0 (0)       0 (0)      0 (0)     168  (510)
7 Wales Mark Hughes 1983–86,88–95     120 (345)      17 (46)  16 (38)     9 (33)    1 (5)     163 (467)
8 Wales Ryan Giggs   1991–present           112 (638)     11 (70)  11 (38)   29 (145) 1 (18)   163 (909)*
9 Netherlands Ruud van Nistelrooy  2001–06  95 (150) 14 (14)    2 00(6)  38 0(47)  1 (2)     150(219)
9 England Paul Scholes 1994–present       106 (483)     13 (46)     9 (21)    26 (132)   0 (15)  154(696)*

No comments:

Post a Comment